Wednesday 24 January 2024

Severe heatwave in eastern Australia to bring hottest weather in four years to NSW.

Extract from ABC News 

ABC News Homepage


Parts of NSW are facing the hottest temperatures in four years this week as a severe heatwave engulfs central and eastern Australia. 

The extreme heat was building across WA last week and is now moving east, bringing the hottest weather in five years to south western South Australia on Tuesday, when maximums soared to 47 degrees.

A map of eastern Australia showing the three-day heatwave forecast. Hotter areas are highlighted in shades of red and orange.
A heatwave extends across most of NSW this week as temperatures soar well above normal.(ABC News)

A north-westerly airstream will spread the hot air across NSW during the next three days, sending both minimum and maximum temperatures up to 12 above average and triggering a heatwave warning for much of the state.

The heatwave is rated as 'severe' for areas north from the Illawarra, an indication the high temperatures could be dangerous to vulnerable groups.

It's even rated as 'extreme' around the lower Mid North Coast, which signals potentially dangerous heat for all groups.

According to NSW Health, groups at risk include babies and young children, pregnant women, people over 65 years old, people who work outside, live alone or are socially isolated, who are homeless or have certain medical conditions.

Temperatures to peak in the high 40s

Hot air is already spreading across inland NSW today, although an onshore breeze will temper conditions along the coastal fringe.

A map of southeastern Australia where hotter regions are shaded dark red and cooler areas are light red to yellow.
Temperatures on Wednesday should climb to the mid-forties in far west NSW.(ABC News)

The heat will intensify further on Thursday, leading to maximums in the mid to high forties in the state's far west — the hottest weather anywhere in NSW since 48.0C was recorded in Walgett in December 2020.

Some modelling even indicates the potential temperatures will spike at around 48 or 49 degrees right near the SA border, just shy of the state's all-time record of 50.1C in Wilcannia way back in January 1939.

While western NSW is baking through near record high temperatures, the hot north-westerly winds will also spread near 40-degree heat to parts of the east through Thursday and Friday.

A map of southeastern Australia where hotter regions are shaded dark red and cooler areas are light red to yellow.
Temperatures up to 12 above average are forecast for Thursday across NSW.(ABC News)

For several regions around the state, the mid-summer scorcher will bring the hottest day in four years, including:

Location

Temperature

Day

Armidale

35C

Thursday

Broken Hill

44C

Wednesday

Ivanhoe

45C

Wednesday/Thursday

Maitland

42C

Friday (hottest day in four years if under 42C)

Tamworth

40C

Thursday

Taree

40C

Friday

Tibooburra

47C

Thursday

Wilcannia

47C

Thursday

Sydney to sweat through warmest night in four years

Most of Sydney is forecast to reach from 35 to 37 degrees on Thursday afternoon, as much as nine above average for January but well below the 40-degree heat observed in early December.

While Thursday's heat won't break any records, the most uncomfortable weather for Sydneysiders should arrive on Friday when the city wakes to a muggy minimum of 25 degrees – the warmest night since late 2020.

A second consecutive maximum in the mid to high thirties will follow on Friday before a cool and thundery southerly change reaches Sydney in the afternoon.

Sydney's heatwave continues an exceptionally warm and humid summer, which has produced an average daytime high of 28 degrees in the CBD, more than two above the long-term average and less than one degree off the December-January record.

Tropical low's enhancing south-east heatwave

One notable feature of the current heatwave is its simultaneous occurrence during an active phase of the monsoon over northern Australia, a common pattern as tropical lows can fuel heatwaves further south.

The heat from a tropical low or cyclone does not blow directly to southern states near ground level, but rather is transported vertically above a tropical system, then moves pole-ward at around 10 kilometres above the surface and eventually sinks back to the surface over the mid latitudes.

Initially, the rising air over the tropics cools and condenses, leading to the thick cloud and heavy rain commonly associated with tropical weather systems, however, by the time the air reaches central and southern Australia it has dried out.

This disparity in moisture levels is what intensifies heatwaves as dry air warms up faster on descent towards the surface relative to the rate the original air-mass cooled during ascent.

When will the heatwave end?

A southerly change will arrive in the south of NSW on Friday, reaching Sydney sometime in the afternoon.

The cool southerly will then sweep through northern NSW on Saturday and, along with an increase in cloud and rain, will help drop temperatures back to average in most regions by Sunday.

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